Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gaël Cessateur is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gaël Cessateur.


Solar Physics | 2013

On-Orbit Degradation of Solar Instruments

A. BenMoussa; S. Gissot; U. Schühle; G. Del Zanna; F. Auchère; Sabri Mekaoui; Andrew Jones; D. Walton; C. J. Eyles; Gérard Thuillier; Daniel B. Seaton; Ingolf E. Dammasch; Gaël Cessateur; Mustapha Meftah; V. Andretta; David Berghmans; Danielle Bewsher; D. Bolsée; L. Bradley; Daniel Stephen Brown; Phillip C. Chamberlin; Steven Dewitte; Leonid V. Didkovsky; Marie Dominique; F. G. Eparvier; Thomas Foujols; Didier Gillotay; B. Giordanengo; Jean-Philippe Halain; R. A. Hock

We present the lessons learned about the degradation observed in several space solar missions, based on contributions at the Workshop about On-Orbit Degradation of Solar and Space Weather Instruments that took place at the Solar Terrestrial Centre of Excellence (Royal Observatory of Belgium) in Brussels on 3 May 2012. The aim of this workshop was to open discussions related to the degradation observed in Sun-observing instruments exposed to the effects of the space environment. This article summarizes the various lessons learned and offers recommendations to reduce or correct expected degradation with the goal of increasing the useful lifespan of future and ongoing space missions.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

ROSINA/DFMS and IES observations of 67P: Ion-neutral chemistry in the coma of a weakly outgassing comet

S. A. Fuselier; Kathrin Altwegg; H. Balsiger; J. J. Berthelier; André Bieler; C. Briois; T. W. Broiles; J. L. Burch; Ursina Maria Calmonte; Gaël Cessateur; Michael R. Combi; J. De Keyser; Björn Fiethe; M. Galand; Sébastien Gasc; Tamas I. Gombosi; H. Gunell; Kenneth Calvin Hansen; Myrtha Hässig; Annette Jäckel; A. Korth; Léna Le Roy; U. Mall; Kathleen Mandt; S. M. Petrinec; Susarla Raghuram; H. Rème; M. Rinaldi; Martin Rubin; Thierry Sémon

The Rosetta encounter with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko provides a unique opportunity for an in situ, up-close investigation of ion-neutral chemistry in the coma of a weakly outgassing comet far from the Sun. Observations of primary and secondary ions and modeling are used to investigate the role of ion-neutral chemistry within the thin coma. Methods. Observations from late October through mid-December 2014 show the continuous presence of the solar wind 30 km from the comet nucleus. These and other observations indicate that there is no contact surface and the solar wind has direct access to the nucleus. On several occasions during this time period, the Rosetta/ROSINA/Double Focusing Mass Spectrometer measured the low-energy ion composition in the coma. Organic volatiles and water group ions and their breakup products (masses 14 through 19), CO 2 + (masses 28 and 44) another mass peaks (at masses 26, 27 , and possibly 30) were observed. Secondary ions include H 3 O + and HCO + (masses 19 and 29). These secondary ions indicate ion-neutral chemistry in the thin coma of the comet. A relatively simple model is constructed to account for the low H 3 O+/H 2 O+ and HCO + /CO + ratios observed in a water dominated coma. Results from this simple model are compared with results from models that include a more detailed chemical reaction network. At low outgassing rates, predictions from the simple model agree with observations and with results from more complex models that include much more chemistry. At higher outgassing rates, the ion-neutral chemistry is still limited and high HCO + /CO + ratios are predicted and observed. However, at higher outgassing rates, the model predicts high H 3 O+/H 2 O + ratios and the observed ratios are often low. These low ratios may be the result of the highly heterogeneous nature of the coma, where CO and CO 2 number densities can exceed that of water.


Archive | 2017

Ion acoustic waves at comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko

H. Gunell; H. Nilsson; Maria Hamrin; Anders Eriksson; Elias Odelstad; Romain Maggiolo; P. Henri; X. Vallières; Kathrin Altwegg; Chia-Yu Tzou; Martin Rubin; K.-H. Glassmeier; G. Stenberg Wieser; C. Simon Wedlund; J. De Keyser; Frederik Dhooghe; Gaël Cessateur; Andrew Gibbons

Context. On 20 January 2015 the Rosetta spacecraft was at a heliocentric distance of 2.5 AU, accompanying comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on its journey toward the Sun. The Ion Composition Analyser ...


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

Ion acoustic waves at comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko: Observations and computations

H. Gunell; H. Nilsson; Maria Hamrin; Anders Eriksson; Elias Odelstad; Romain Maggiolo; P. Henri; X. Vallières; Kathrin Altwegg; Chia-Yu Tzou; Martin Rubin; K.-H. Glassmeier; G. Stenberg Wieser; C. Simon Wedlund; J. De Keyser; Frederik Dhooghe; Gaël Cessateur; Andrew Gibbons

Context. On 20 January 2015 the Rosetta spacecraft was at a heliocentric distance of 2.5 AU, accompanying comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on its journey toward the Sun. The Ion Composition Analyser ...


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

The place of the Sun among the Sun-like stars

A. I. Shapiro; W. Schmutz; Gaël Cessateur; E. Rozanov

Context. Monitoring of the photometric and chromospheric HK emission data series of stars similar to the Sun in age and average activity level showed that there is an empirical correlation between the average stellar chromospheric activity level and the photometric variability. In general, more active stars show larger photometric variability. Interestingly, the measurements and reconstructions of the solar irradiance show that the Sun is significantly less variable than indicated by the empirical relationship. Aims. We aim to identify possible reasons for the Sun to be currently outside of this relationship. Methods. We employed different scenarios of solar HK emission and irradiance variability and compared them with available time series of Sun-like stars. Results. We show that the position of the Sun on the diagram of photometric variability versus chromospheric activity changes with time. The present solar position is different from its temporal mean position as the satellite era of continuous solar irradiance measurements has accidentally coincided with a period of unusually high and stable solar activity. Our analysis suggests that although present solar variability is significantly smaller than indicated by the stellar data, the temporal mean solar variability might be in agreement with the stellar data. We propose that the continuation of the photometric program and its expansion to a larger stellar sample will ultimately allow us to constrain the historical solar variability.


Journal of Advanced Research | 2013

The Space Weather and Ultraviolet Solar Variability (SWUSV) Microsatellite Mission

Luc Damé; Mustapha Meftah; Alain Hauchecorne; Philippe Keckhut; Alain Sarkissian; Marion Marchand; Abdenour Irbah; Eric Quémerais; Slimane Bekki; Thomas Foujols; Matthieu Kretzschmar; Gaël Cessateur; A. I. Shapiro; Werner Schmutz; S. V. Kuzin; Vladimir A. Slemzin; A. M. Urnov; S. A. Bogachev; Jose M. G. Merayo; Peter Brauer; K. Tsinganos; Antonis M. Paschalis; Ayman Mahrous; Safinaz Khaled; Ahmed Ghitas; Besheir Marzouk; Amal Zaki; Ahmed A. Hady; Rangaiah Kariyappa

We present the ambitions of the SWUSV (Space Weather and Ultraviolet Solar Variability) Microsatellite Mission that encompasses three major scientific objectives: (1) Space Weather including the prediction and detection of major eruptions and coronal mass ejections (Lyman-Alpha and Herzberg continuum imaging); (2) solar forcing on the climate through radiation and their interactions with the local stratosphere (UV spectral irradiance from 180 to 400 nm by bands of 20 nm, plus Lyman-Alpha and the CN bandhead); (3) simultaneous radiative budget of the Earth, UV to IR, with an accuracy better than 1% in differential. The paper briefly outlines the mission and describes the five proposed instruments of the model payload: SUAVE (Solar Ultraviolet Advanced Variability Experiment), an optimized telescope for FUV (Lyman-Alpha) and MUV (200–220 nm Herzberg continuum) imaging (sources of variability); UPR (Ultraviolet Passband Radiometers), with 64 UV filter radiometers; a vector magnetometer; thermal plasma measurements and Langmuir probes; and a total and spectral solar irradiance and Earth radiative budget ensemble (SERB, Solar irradiance & Earth Radiative Budget). SWUSV is proposed as a small mission to CNES and to ESA for a possible flight as early as 2017–2018.


Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate | 2012

Extreme Ultraviolet Solar Irradiance during the rising phase of solar cycle 24 observed by PROBA2/LYRA

Matthieu Kretzschmar; Ingolf E. Dammasch; Marie Dominique; Joe Zender; Gaël Cessateur; Elke D’Huys

The Large-Yield Radiometer (LYRA) is a radiometer that has monitored the solar irradiance at high cadence and in four pass bands since January 2010. Both the instrument and its spacecraft, PROBA2 (Project for OnBoard Autonomy), have several innovative features for space instrumentation, which makes the data reduction necessary to retrieve the long-term variations of solar irradiance more complex than for a fully optimized solar physics mission. In this paper, we describe how we compute the long-term time series of the two extreme ultraviolet irradiance channels of LYRA and compare the results with those of SDO/EVE. We find that the solar EUV irradiance has increased by a factor of 2 since the last solar minimum (between solar cycles 23 and 24), which agrees reasonably well with the EVE observations.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

SOLAR/SOLSPEC mission on ISS: In-flight performances for SSI measurements in the UV

D. Bolsée; Nuno Pereira; Didier Gillotay; Praveen Pandey; Gaël Cessateur; Thomas Foujols; Slimane Bekki; Alain Hauchecorne; Mustapha Meftah; Luc Damé; Michel Hersé; A. Michel; C. Jacobs; A. Sela

The SOLar SPECtrum (SOLSPEC) experiment is part of the Solar Monitoring Observatory (SOLAR) payload, and has been externally mounted on the Columbus module of the International Space Station (ISS) since 2008. SOLAR/SOLSPEC combines three absolutely calibrated double monochromators with concave gratings for measuring the solar spectral irradiance (SSI) from 166 nm to 3088 nm. This physical quantity is a key input for studies of climatology, planetary atmospheres, and solar physics. Aims. A general description of the instrument is given, including in-flight operations and performance of the ultraviolet (UV) channel from 175 nm to 340 nm. Methods. We developed a range of processing and correction methods, which are described in detail. For example, methods for correcting thermal behavior effects, instrument linearity, and especially the accuracy of the wavelength and absolute radiometric scales have been validated by modeling the standard uncertainties. Results. The deliverable is a quiet Sun UV reference solar spectrum as measured by SOLAR/SOLSPEC during the minimum of solar activity prior to cycle 24 1 . Comparisons with other instruments measuring SSI are also presented.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Solar irradiance observations with PREMOS filter radiometers on the PICARD mission: In-flight performance and data release

Gaël Cessateur; Wermer Schmutz; Christoph Wehrli; Julian Groebner; Margit Haberreiter; Matthieu Kretzschmar; Egene Rozanov; Micha Schöll; A. I. Shapiro; Gérard Thuillier; Tatiana Egorova; Wolfgang Finsterle; Nigel P. Fox; Jean-François Hochedez; Silvio Koller; Mustapha Meftah; Peter Meindl; Stephan Nyeki; Daniel Pfiffner; Hansjörg Roth; Michel Rouzé; Marcel Spescha; Rinat Tagirov; Lutz Werner; Jules Wyss

The PREcision Monitoring Sensor (PREMOS) is a solar radiometer on board the French PICARD mission that was launched in June 2010 and decommissioned in April 2014. Aims. The PREMOS radiometer obtains solar irradiance measurements in specific spectral windows in the UV, visible, and near- infrared. In this paper, the PREMOS data and calibration methods are presented. Methods. Using back-up channels, the degradation can theoretically be assessed to correct operational channels. However, a strong degradation within all PREMOS channels requires the application of additional methods, namely using back-up channels and assess- ing the degradation via a proxy-based model. Results. The corrected Level 3 PREMOS data are then used in different contexts in order to be validated. First, the signature of the p-mode are retrieved from the PREMOS data. The Venus transit allows us to empirically determine the intrinsic noise level within the PREMOS high cadence data for the visible and near-infrared channels. We then compare the PREMOS data directly to other data sets, namely from the SOLar-STellar Irradiance Comparison Experiment (SOLSTICE) and the Solar Irradiance Monitor (SIM) instru- ments on board the SOlar Radiation and Climate Experiment (SORCE) spacecraft. Regarding the UV channels, we found an excellent correlation over the lifetime of the PREMOS mission. The ratio between SORCE and PREMOS observations is always less than 1%. Regarding the SSI measurements in the visible and near-infrared, a comparison of short-term variations (i.e. 27-day modulation) shows a rather good correlation by taking into consideration the intrinsic noise within both SIM and PREMOS observations.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Photochemistry of forbidden oxygen lines in the inner coma of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

Gaël Cessateur; J. De Keyser; Romain Maggiolo; Andrew Gibbons; Guillaume Gronoff; H. Gunell; Frederik Dhooghe; Jérôme Loreau; Nathalie Vaeck; Kathrin Altwegg; André Bieler; Christelle Briois; Ursina Maria Calmonte; Michael R. Combi; Björn Fiethe; S. A. Fuselier; Tamas I. Gombosi; Myrtha Hässig; Léna Le Roy; Eddy Neefs; Martin Rubin; Thierry Sémon

Abstract Observations of the green and red‐doublet emission lines have previously been realized for several comets. We present here a chemistry‐emission coupled model to study the production and loss mechanisms of the O(1S) and O(1D) states, which are responsible for the emission lines of interest for comet 67P/Churyumov‐Gerasimenko. The recent discovery of O2 in significant abundance relative to water 3.80 ± 0.85% within the coma of 67P has been taken into consideration for the first time in such models. We evaluate the effect of the presence of O2 on the green to red‐doublet emission intensity ratio, which is traditionally used to assess the CO2 abundance within cometary atmospheres. Model simulations, solving the continuity equation with transport, show that not taking O2 into account leads to an underestimation of the CO2 abundance within 67P, with a relative error of about 25%. This strongly suggests that the green to red‐doublet emission intensity ratio alone is not a proper tool for determining the CO2 abundance, as previously suggested. Indeed, there is no compelling reason why O2 would not be a common cometary volatile, making revision of earlier assessments regarding the CO2 abundance in cometary atmospheres necessary. The large uncertainties of the CO2 photodissociation cross section imply that more studies are required in order to better constrain the O(1S) and O(1D) production through this mechanism. Space weather phenomena, such as powerful solar flares, could be used as tools for doing so, providing additional information on a good estimation of the O2 abundance within cometary atmospheres.

Collaboration


Dive into the Gaël Cessateur's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. Gunell

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frederik Dhooghe

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Gibbons

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Romain Maggiolo

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. De Keyser

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. A. Fuselier

University of Texas at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jérôme Loreau

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge